Adjunct reshapes the scattered academic lives of part-time faculty — the half-dozen syllabi, the visiting appointments, the Fulbright buried under "Other Experience" — into a single commanding document that reads like tenure.
Each cell is a framed specimen from a real CV transformation. Scroll through a life in scholarship being assembled.
My research examines how postcolonial African fiction constructs temporal experience as a site of political resistance. I am interested in how time works in literature. Drawing on archival materials gathered during my Fulbright fellowship in Dakar (2016–17), I argue that writers like Sembène Ousmane and Mongo Beti deploy anachrony not as aesthetic experiment but as decolonial praxis.
↑ Tracked revision: vague opening replaced with Fulbright-grounded specificity
I write to apply for the position of Assistant Professor of Postcolonial Studies (Req. #2026-CL-047). My research, grounded in a Fulbright fellowship in Senegal and developed across six years of teaching at three Chicago-area institutions, positions me to contribute immediately to your department's emphasis on Global Anglophone and Francophone literary traditions.
↑ Department name, requirement number, and research fit are auto-populated from job listing
Pilot data from community colleges and R1 universities. All outcomes anonymized per institutional partnership agreements.
"We'd tried résumé workshops. What Adjunct does is different — it treats the CV as an argument, not a list. Our faculty started winning searches they'd been losing for years."
"I had a Fulbright buried in a miscellaneous section. After Adjunct, I had a fellowship headline, a publications list with DOIs, and a teaching statement that actually sounded like me. First tenure-track offer came four months later."
Adjunct is a faculty development investment, not a personal expense. We work with institutions to deploy CV services across part-time faculty pools — community colleges, R1 systems, and independent liberal arts colleges.